An Evolutionary Psychological Perspective on a the Development of Individual Differences
Jan Guus Waldorp* and Harry van de Wiel
University of Groningen, University Medical Center, Europe
Submission: July 24, 2016; Published: July 28, 2017
*Corresponding author: Jan Guus Waldorp, Wenckebach Institute, University of Groningen, University Medical Center, Groningen, The Netherlands, Europe, Email: waldorp@mindlogyx.com
How to cite this article:Jan G W, Harry v d W. An Evolutionary Psychological Perspective on a the Development of Individual Differences. Psychol Behav Sci Int J. 2017; 5(3): 555662. DOI: 10.19080/PBSIJ.2017.05.555662
Introduction
Due to genetic inheritance and their experience with the environment, people are markedly different from one another, not just physically but also mentally. Therefore the issue of this succinct introduction is: why do individuals vary and how and when do individual differences develop? In search for an answer to these questions, we recently developed a theory for an evolutionary psychological explanation for the development of individual differences. One of the main reasons for developing a novel theoretical approach is that evolutionary psychology (EP) currently lacks its own framework for identifying and explaining individual differences. Based on our findings we constructed hierarchal Evolutionary Taxonomy of Motivation (E to M) that we then correlated with the traits of the five factor model (FFM). Thus E to M is more than just a useful tool for categorizing individual differences, it also allows for understanding, explaining and predicting individual behavior.
Why Individuals Vary
People are different, but why? According to evolutionary theory individual differences are essential for sexual selection, the process that creates and maintains functional adaptations in natural selection Hawley and Buss [1]. EP builds on Darwin's theory on secondary sexual ornaments which implied there are separate indicators to advertise an individual's evolved fitness to other individuals. In humans, with a brain that is the largest of all animals in relation to body size, this organ is a sexually selected mental indicator of fitness Miller [2].
Fundamental Adaptations
To understand why people vary and what is at stake for the individual, we have to look at what is needed to be successful in evolutionary terms. Fitness, the measure of an individual’s direct reproductive success by passing on his genes, is too narrow a concept as seen through the gene's eye view Dawkins [3]. Inclusive fitness Hamilton [4] in evolution means helping family members that carry the same genes to reproduce. Nevertheless, all individuals have to deal with three different social challenges in life that is all linked to fundamental adaptations: forming and maintaining long-term relationships, being able to cooperate with members of one’s in group and competing successfully with one's rivals.
When and how do Individual Differences Develop?
Research has demonstrated that individual differences are relatively stable over the years which make it even more compelling to understand how and when individual differences develop. Individual differences are the result of the interaction between genes and the environment. Individual stability is probably largely due to genetic inheritance Plomin [5]. So far, however, what percentage of the individuals' psychological makeup is due to its genes or the environment remains, except in some instances, unclear.
What is clear, however, is that due to its large brain that allows for developmental plasticity "novel features of hominid evolution such as high intelligence, language, sophisticated tool use, and an immense expansion in cultural traditions and learning" humans occupy what is called the 'cognitive niche' Tooby [6].
Within this universal human cognitive niche however, individual differentiation is needed. It appears that people differ in their quality of solving particular psychological social problems. This is logical because there is no optimum for all situations in all contexts and some kind of ‘specialization’ is basic to all people. Competition for instance , according to Hawley's strategies of resource control Hawley [1] may be expressed as coercive strategies of resource control through threatening and taking or prosocial strategies of resource control that relies on friendship, cooperation and reciprocity. By comparison phenotypic polymorphism in wild populations is rather large: very early in life an animal picks up a cue from the environment like some kind of 'weather forecast' such as grasshoppers rise against a black background and become black instead of green Nettle [7]. Similarly a toddler picks up cues from the social environment (i.e. parental investment, allocation of resources) and through deontic reasoning Cummins [8,9] based on its gene X environment interaction non consciously 'chooses' what we have called its social strategy, a strategic differentiation Hawley [1] that will stay with the individual for the rest of its life.
Three Fundamental Adaptations
The human mind seems to have evolutionarily 'anticipated' such a developmental specialization. It contains three different mental systems, one for affective relationships and one for cooperation and one for competition, to deal with each of the social challenges separately Harris. The systems develop through different processes in the brain, follow different neural paths and are stored in different parts of our memory system Lewis [10]. One of these systems will eventually lead to a specific motivational profile that guides the social strategy of the individual. Early development is fundamental because neural plasticity is time-sensitive, not infinite and does not provide an optimal phenotype for all contexts Nettle [7].
Conclusion
Based on our evolutionary psychological literature we have construed that the information is sufficiently reliable to come to our conclusions. Obviously more research and empirical evidence is needed but for the time being our conclusions seem to pan out [11]. In the near future we hope that further empirical research may draw definitive conclusions but we believe to have developed a promising route that eventually will increase our understanding of individual differences.
Reference
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